Having started off like a runaway train, West Indies ran out of steam, and after a couple of early hiccups and a rain delay that lasted
more than two hours, Australia sauntered to their first Champions Trophy
triumph. When it came to the crunch, with a major trophy at stake,
Australia's greater experience and quality came to the fore, with the
bowlers showing immense resolve after being subjected to an early
shellacking.

Damien Martyn's 47 continued his splendid run in the tournament, and there
was an invaluable 57 from Shane Watson as Australia put their jinx - they
had never previously made the final - to bed in emphatic fashion. When the
players finally came back out at 9pm, with 15 overs having been lost to
the rain, the Duckworth-Lewis par score was pegged at 115. With a further
25 overs in which to get 71, Martyn and Watson approached the task in
measured fashion.

The singles came easily with the field spread, and Martyn laced a Corey
Collymore delivery through midwicket with a touch of class as West Indies'
hopes started to disappear like the clouds overhead. When Jerome Taylor
was recalled to the fray, Martyn clipped an errant delivery to fine leg,
and once Watson clipped one beautifully through midwicket, the crowd's
response was an eerie quietness. The remainder of the game was uneventful,
with both batsmen finding gaps at will as the last vestiges of West Indian
resistance were swept away.

The spadework for victory had been done by the bowlers, and Nathan Bracken
in particular, after Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Chris Gayle had given West
Indies a rollicking start. With the rapidly filling stands roaring on the
underdog, Brett Lee ran in with little or no rhythm, and Chanderpaul got
the scoreboard motoring with a leading edge that just evaded Michael
Clarke at point. And the decision to give Bracken the new ball in place of
Glenn McGrath paid no immediate dividends either, with Gayle nonchalantly
smacking one past point.

More punishment followed in Lee's next over. Chanderpaul clipped one
beautifully down to long-on before an ungainly hoick flew off the edge for
six over third man. It only got worse, with a sublime Chanderpaul on-drive
in Lee's third over the precursor to a peachy straight-drive and a
cracking shot through the covers from Gayle. By the time Bracken struck,
with Chanderpaul miscuing a cut, West Indies were off and running at
incredible pace.

By then, Lee had been taken off, having gone for a whopping 36 from three
overs, but if Australia expected a lull, that certainly wasn't the case.
Gayle launched a cheesed-off McGrath for two huge sixes over midwicket,
and an uncharacteristic half-volley was crisply dispatched through the
covers as 14 came from his second over.

The tide turned decisively once Bracken got his cutters going from the
other end. Ramnaresh Sarwan played too early at one, and Gayle's
thrill-a-minute 37 was ended by a superb delivery. Suddenly, batting was
no longer a stroll in the park, and an emboldened Ponting brought back Lee
in the 14th over. By the time McGrath confirmed that his big-game
temperament was peerless by getting one to graze the outer edge of Brian
Lara's bat, the complexion of the match had turned utterly.

McGrath went on to bowl three maidens, and by the time he was taken off,
he also had the wicket of Runako Morton to show for his efforts. Marlon
Samuels and Dwayne Bravo briefly threatened a recovery, but the
introduction of Watson scotched any Great Escape plans. Samuels tamely
chipped one to midwicket, and Carlton Baugh shuffled across a few inches
too many to leave the innings in absolute disarray.

Lee and Brad Hogg, who outfoxed Bravo into playing no shot, mopped up the
rest, leaving Australia with the simple task of scoring 139. With dinner
still cooking, Lara opted to give the new ball to Gayle, an experiment
that lasted all of one over. When Ian Bradshaw came on in his place, the
reward was instantaneous. Adam Gilchrist edged and walked, and the stadium
erupted. Then, with the stands bellowing his name, Taylor trapped Ponting
on the walk. Suddenly, the formality of a run chase wasn't so
straightforward anymore.

Martyn eased anxieties with three gorgeous strokes - two square-drives off
Taylor, and a cut over backward point when Collymore was introduced in
Bradshaw's place. Watson chipped in with a sweetly timed clip through
midwicket off Taylor, silencing a crowd that was still praying for the
impossible to become possible. Dinner and the subsequent rain delay then
held Australia back, but ultimately, there was no stopping a team that
epitomises the old Hemingway line about grace under pressure. Call them
Dad's army or what you will, but they can play the game like no one else.